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Situative Cognition in Educational Psychology

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Title: Situative Cognition in Educational Psychology


1
Situative Cognition in Educational Psychology
  • Ed Tech Masters Program
  • Summer 2005

2
What is Situative Cognition?
  • Also known as Situated, Sociohistoric or
    Socicultural.
  • The fields of ethnography, sociolinguistics,
    anthropology, and sociology contributed to this
    perspective.
  • Learning is tied to the context or situation,
    students culture shapes their cognitive
    development, learning is highly social.

3
What is Situative Cognition? II
  • Situative cognition focuses more on the social
    rather than the individual as cognitive
    psychology tends to do All learning is social.
  • Views knowledge as distributed among people and
    their environments, including the objects,
    artifacts, tools, books, and the communities of
    which they are a part. Greeno, Collins,
    Resnick, 1996

4
Lev Vygotsky (1896 1933)
A Russian psychologist, Vygotsky worked in the
post-revolutionary Soviet Union to rebuild
psychology
along Marxist lines. He worked to apply
psychology to the problems confronting the new
state, especially in the field of ed psych.
Vygotskys writings were banned in the Soviet
Union in 1936 and only became available in the
west in the 1960s at which point they became
highly influential.
5
Vygotsky Continued
  • Unlike Piagets image of the individual
    constructing understanding alone, Vygotsky saw
    cognitive development as depending more on
    interactions with the people and tools in the
    childs world.
  • Tools are real pens, paper, computers or
    symbols language, math systems, signs

6
...and more Vygotsky
  • Vygotsky developed the theory of the Zone of
    proximal development (zoped)
  • The zoped is the distance between where a learner
    is at developmentally on their own and where a
    learner could be with the help of a more
    knowledgeable other.
  • A more knowledgeable other can be an adult or a
    peer, helping a learner in this way is to
    scaffold their learning.

7
A Little on Learning
  • Two main elements of learning in situated
    cognition
  • All learning is social and happens within a
    community through participation.
  • Learning is tied to its situation or context.

8
More on Learning
  • Learning occurs through participation in a group,
    all learning is social.
  • New participants initially observe and
    participate peripherally, as they gain experience
    they become more central participants.
  • This is an apprentice approach to learning.
  • Cognitive apprenticeship Collins, Brown,
    Newman (1989)

9
and more on Learning
  • Collins (1988) defines situated learning as the
    notion of learning knowledge and skills in
    contexts that reflect the way the knowledge will
    be useful in real life
  • Examples of situated learning
  • Laves weight watcher cottage cheese
  • Laves homemakers grocery store math
  • Brazilian street kids math when making sales on
    the street

10
Transfer
  • According to situated cognition, knowledge does
    not transfer between tasks.
  • Teaching through abstraction is of little use
    since real learning occurs in authentic
    situations only
  • Ex New police academy grads being told by
    experienced cops now forget everything you
    learned.

11
More on Transfer
  • If learning is being able to participate in a
    community of practice, the issue of transfer can
    be problematic.
  • Does transfer apply to new practices within a
    community (e.g. new math problems) or to
    practices outside the community (e.g. work) ?
  • Many resources and supports in one community
    dont carry over to a different community.

12
Motivation
  • The situative view emphasizes how peoples
    identities are formed by their participation in a
    group.
  • According to this way of thinking, students can
    be motivated to learn by participating in
    communities where learning is valued.
  • Ex Children want to learn to read and write to
    become members of the literary club, to be able
    to participate and interact with the written
    world.

13
Critiques of Situative Cognition
  • While the theory takes into account the social,
    the individual tends to be ignored.
  • Transfer is problematic since knowledge doesnt
    transfer between tasks.
  • The theory cant account for learning through
    abstraction or generalization (most school
    learning)

14
Situative Cognition in Education
  • Knowing how to participate in social practices
    has a large role in schools.
  • Classroom activities are often organized as
    social groups and children participate in these
    groups with varying degrees of success.
  • Much of students identities are formed by the
    groups they participate in at school, e.g.
    sports, chess, journalism, A.P. classes ...

15
Situative Cognition in Education II
  • A push for authentic learning where students
    learn content matter that is situated in a real
    world context (ex Resnick article)
  • Students are encouraged to think and work like
    scientists, historians, mathematicians, etc.
  • Authentic does not necessarily mean real world
    but rather tasks that are true to the domain
  • Encouraging classrooms to create a community of
    learning that promotes inquiry and development of
    identities.
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